Residential building Spiekerbartstrasse 1

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The residential building Spiekerbartstrasse 1 is located in Bremen , Mitte district in the Schnoorviertel , Spiekerbartstrasse 1/2 corner of Schnoor. The house was built in 1584.
The building has been a listed building in Bremen since 1973 .

history

Left the Partal, right the Ottjen-Alldag-Brunnen

The original population of the Schnoor consisted mainly of river fishermen and boatmen. In the epoch of classicism and historicism , most of the often small buildings were built from around 1800 to 1890. In the further course it became a poor people's quarter, which largely fell into disrepair - especially after the Second World War . In 1959 the city passed a statute for the protection of the building stock worth preserving. The houses have been documented and many have been listed as historical monuments since the 1970s. From the 1960s onwards, with the support of the city, renovations, gap closings and renovations took place in the Schnoor.

The two-story, slurried gabled house with a gable roof and a porch (no. 1) with the inscription " IS GOD WE imiJ WOL KAN WEDDERBURN US 1584 " was in the period of 1584 Renaissance built. The portal (No. 2) with the inscription dates from 1750 when the house was extended and rebuilt. Here lived u. a. mainly a craftsman and in 1904 an umbrella maker.
In 1964, the Ottjen-Alldag-Brunnen by the Bremen sculptor Claus Homfeld was built next to the house . The fountain dates from 1733 and used to stand on a farm in Lankenau near Bremen. It was supplemented by the Ottjen Alldag sculpture.
Today (2018) the house is used by a gallery as a shop and for living.

The name of the very short, jagged Spiekerbartstrasse could come from the Spiekerboer , the drill for nails . Spiekernagel was the Low German name in northern Germany for a large square nail with a flat head and Boer for a drill. The name Schnoor ( Snoor ) means cord :. He came through the ship's trade and the manufacture of ropes and ropes (= cord).

literature

  • Karl Dillschneider: The Schnoor, Bremen 1978.
  • Dieter Brand-Kruth: The Schnoor - a fairytale district . Bremer Drucksachen Service Klaus Stute, 3rd edition Bremen, 2003.
  • Karl Dillschneider, Wolfgang Loose: The Schnoor Old + New A comparison in pictures . Schnoor Association Heini Holtenbeen, Bremen 1981.
  • Karl Dillschneider: The Schnoor. Vibrant life in Bremen's oldest district. Bremen 1992.
  • Rudolf Stein : Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance architecture in Bremen , Bremen 1962.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Monument database of the LfD
  2. Monika Porsch: Bremer Straßenlexikon , complete edition. Schünemann, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-7961-1850-X .

Coordinates: 53 ° 4 ′ 21.3 "  N , 8 ° 48 ′ 36.6"  E